Sharon & Abbas Hold Summit & Agree to Ceasefire

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In the first Israeli-Palestinian summit in four years, Israeli Prime Minister Gen. Ariel Sharon and Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas are meeting today in Egypt to verbally agree to end four years of fighting. Since the intifada began in September 2000, about 3,600 Palestinians and 1050 Israelis have been killed in fighting. Abbas is expected to announce the end of the intifada and Sharon will vow to refrain from any military action in the occupied territories if the ceasefire is not broken. The meeting marks the first time Sharon and Abbas have met since the death of Yasser Arafat.

Rice Outlines U.S. Effort in Resolving Conflict

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On Monday, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice announced that President Bush will meet separately in the spring with each leader. In addition Bush plans to appointing a senior security coordinator to help train and equip Palestinian forces and monitor Israeli and Palestinian promises. Rice met with Abbas in Ramallah on Monday but decided not to visit Arafat’s nearby tomb.

Israel Separation Wall Blamed For West Bank Flooding

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In other news from the region, Palestinian residents in the West Bank town of Qalqilya have blamed the Israeli separation wall for widespread flooding because the wall has trapped water inside the town. The wall almost completely encloses the farming community. For months residents complained the wall cut off the town from surrounding farmland as well as jobs, schools and medical care.

Iraq Interior Minister: Security Forces Need 18 Months To Prepare

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In Iraq, the country’s interim interior minister said Monday it could take 18 more months before Iraqi security forces would be prepared to properly secure the country. His comments came as a pair of suicide bombings killed more than 25 people in two of the deadliest attacks since last week’s election. Earlier today another 21 Iraqis died after a bomb went off near an Iraqi army recruitment center in west Baghdad.

In Iraq, Hundreds Protest Mosul Election Problems

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In other Iraq news, hundreds of Iraqis from Mosul demonstrated Sunday outside the heavily guarded Green Zone to protest the disenfranchisement of thousands of voters in Mosul. The demonstrators included many Iraqi Christians who said polling centers never opened in their neighborhoods. The groups estimated as many as 200,000 people around Mosul were prevented from voting.

Senate Committee Oks Chertoff as Homeland Security Head

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On Capitol Hill, the Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committee has approved Michael Chertoff as Homeland Security Director by a voice vote. Senator Carl Levin voted "present" to protest what he said was the unwillingness of the Justice Department to provide information about accusations of unusually harsh interrogations at Guantanamo.

Kuwaiti Detainees Report Torture at Guantanamo

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In other news on Guantanamo Bay, an attorney for 11 Kuwaiti prisoners held at the U.S. prison claim their clients have been beaten by chains, sodomized, and given electrical shocks. The attorney learned of the abuse after meeting with the Kuwaitis.

U.S. Accused of Violating Client-Lawyer Privilege

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Meanwhile a former Australian detainee at Guantanamo has accused US officials of secretly listening to conversations he had with his attorney. Mamdouh Habib said officials then used information they obtained from the eavesdropping during interrogations to get at him psychologically. Habib’s attorney Stephen Hopper said "The American authorities were obviously listening in to private conferences and not respecting client-lawyer privilege as they said they would do."

UN Calls on Nations to Fulfill Tsunami Pledges

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The United Nations is calling on world governments to fulfill their pledges to help the victims of December’s tsunami in the Indian Ocean. Governments pledged nearly $1 billion but only about $360 million has been received so far. A spokesperson from Oxfam criticized the inaction saying "When the public pledged their funds, these were delivered in hours, yet governments have had over a month and far less than 50% has been delivered."

GOP Asks Stations Not to Air Ad Criticizing Bush Social Security Plan

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The Republican National Committee has sent letters to TV stations across the country asking them not to air a new commercial that criticizes President Bush’s proposal to privatize social security. The ad which was produced by the group MoveOn.org claims that privatization will result in social security benefit cuts of up to 46 percent. In the letterRNC Deputy Counsel Michael Bayes writes that as an FCC licensee the stations must "protect the integrity of the American marketplace of ideas, and to avoid broadcasting deliberate misrepresentations of the facts." The letter goes on to read "This letter places you on notice that the information contained in the above-cited advertisement is false and misleading." MoveOn has defended the ad saying that the information in the ad is based on an analysis performed by the chief actuary at the Social Security Administration. [ Watch ad]

Nepal Troops Attacks Rebel Camps

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In Nepal, military troops have attacked Maoist rebel camps in the jungles in a new offensive that began after the Nepali king seized power last week. Reuters reports dozens of rebels may have been killed. Last week Nepali King Gyanendra sacked the entire government and suspended all civil rights including the right of the press to criticize the government. Since then hundreds of political leaders, activists, journalists and human rights workers have been arrested around the country.

Boston Priest Convicted of Raping Boy

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In Boston, former priest Paul Shanley was convicted Monday of raping and assaulting a young boy in the 1980s. He faces up to life a prison. The victim who is now a 27-year-old firefighter said the priest began raping him when he was six years old when he was attending religious school at Shanley’s church.

Anti-war Group Issues "Peace Tax Returns"

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The National War Tax Resistance Coordinating Committee is encouraging taxpayers opposed to the war in Iraq to file a Peace Tax Return when they file taxes with the IRS. The group has published two types of Peace Tax Returns — one for tax resisters who are refusing to pay for part or all of their federal taxes and another for taxpayers who want to request the federal government divert their taxes to nonmilitary programs. The letter reads in part, "Each year at least half of our tax dollars are used to pay for current and past wars. If instead this money were invested in peace initiatives and aid programs we could truly build a better and more secure world."

DN! In Depth

By Amy Goodman with Denis Moynihan — The corporate television newscasts spend more and more time covering the increasingly disruptive, costly and at times deadly weather. But they consistently fail to make the link between extreme weather and climate change.